Penalty shootout heartbreak for Saudi Arabia as they lose to South Korea in Asian Cup


John McAuley
  • English
  • Arabic

Saudi Arabia were less than a minute from a result for the ages, but South Korea's substitutes combined and instead an engrossing Asian Cup victory was theirs.

In the end, it was Son Heung-min and Co that kept their tournament dream alive, the two-time champions coming through a titanic last-16 clash at Education City Stadium on penalties on Monday to book a place in the quarter-finals in Qatar.

Maybe that 64-year wait for trophy No 3 will meet its end in less than two weeks’ time. Australia, the 2015 winners, form the next obstacle to overcome for Jurgen Klinsmann’s crew, on Friday. For Roberto Mancini’s men, they depart Doha no doubt bogged down by what might have been.

They were so close. Ninety-nine minutes had elapsed in Al Rayyan when Seol Young-woo met a deep cross, directed his header back across goal, and Cho Gue-sung nodded home.

Saudi, 1-0 up in an instant at the start of the second half through Abdullah Radif, had been pegged back at the death.

Their exit was soon confirmed. Jo Hyeon-woo saved in the shootout from Sami Al Najei and Adbulrahman Ghareeb, and Wolves forward Hwang Hee-chan sealed it.

It was hard on not only on the Saudi players, but also their support, especially the large section camped behind their goal in the first half, who had made their presence felt from the off. Having roared through the announcement of their line-up pre-match, they roundly booed Son’s name. It figured; the South Korea captain is comfortably Asia’s foremost footballer.

Once the action began, every passage of South Korean possession played out to a tune of 42,000-plus whistles. If the early exchanges were cagey to say the least, the magnitude of the occasion, and what was on offer, perhaps pinched at the players.

The first time the contest did open up, Son raced away from the Saudi defence but, as he checked to cut inside from a trademark curled shot, Hassan Tambakti thwarted him. Given the reaction it elicited from the defender’s compatriots in the stands, you would have thought Saudi Arabia had gone 1-0 up.

If that was the only real moment to set pulses racing, after a pretty placid opening 25 minutes, the match burst into life. First, Son was played in over the top by full-back Kim Tae-hwan and, having controlled well and then converged on the Saudi goal, he shot through Tambakti’s legs but straight at goalkeeper Ahmed Al Kassar.

At the other end, Salem Al Dawsari burst suddenly to life, the current Asian Player of the Year slaloming past an opponent before releasing Saleh Al Shehri. The Al Hilal striker, preferred by Mancini despite his lack of game-time for his club, dragged wide from the edge of the penalty area.

On 40 minutes, Saudi twice shuddered twice the South Korea crossbar. Al Shehri thumped a header from a corner off the woodwork Ali Lajami powered the rebound off the crossbar, and Al Dawsari nodded a third effort inches wide. The Saudi support erupted in unison.

They wouldn’t have long into the second half to wait for another opportunity. One minute after the break, Al Dawsari flicked the ball, probably inadvertently, through to Radif, who took one touch, steadied himself, and swept his shot past Jo. Radif took off towards those packed in behind the advertising hoardings, his teammates trying to keep pace.

Introduced at half-time in place of Al Shehri, the goal represented his initial two touches. Talk about instant impact.

Tails up, Saudi sought to turn the screw. Mohammed Kanno, willed on by the majority of Education City, fired a couple of shots from range well off target.

Abdullah Al Khaibari fizzed one at Jun, although it was comfortable for the Korean; Radif pulled a low drive across goal; Al Dawsari, relatively quiet bar that first-half jolt, seemed to have extra intent in his step.

Even Lajami, who blocked South Korea’s advances, threw himself into challenges, or glanced clear crosses. The Al Nassr defender embodied Saudi’s never-say-die attitude.

Apparently caught up in the emotion of it all, Mancini was called from his dugout and booked.

With five minutes remaining, Al Kassar deflected away Hwang In-beom’s goal-bound shot with an outstretched leg, Tambakti blocked twice almost on his line, and Al Kassar repelled a pair of far-post headers.

In the third minute of 10 allocated for injury-time, Cho headed on to the Saudi crossbar. Hwang screwed wide when played in.

Surely Saudi could not hold on to their lead? They could not. Seol found Cho and South Korea were level. Their bench raced from the dugout, leaving Klinsmann to punch the air repeatedly in delight. It was some reprieve for the under-fire German.

In the first period of extra-time, Kim Min-jae tested Al Kassar from a corner; in the second, Hong Hyun-seok, Cho and Son somehow contrived to spurn a golden chance. Then Al Kassar denied Lee Kang-in at full stretch.

And then to penalties. Jo pushed away the two spot-kicks, leaving Hwang to apply the final flourish. At one point seemingly done and dusted, South Korea’s Asian Cup dream sustains until Friday – and maybe even further.

The Little Things

Directed by: John Lee Hancock

Starring: Denzel Washington, Rami Malek, Jared Leto

Four stars

TV: World Cup Qualifier 2018 matches will be aired on on OSN Sports HD Cricket channel

Sole survivors
  • Cecelia Crocker was on board Northwest Airlines Flight 255 in 1987 when it crashed in Detroit, killing 154 people, including her parents and brother. The plane had hit a light pole on take off
  • George Lamson Jr, from Minnesota, was on a Galaxy Airlines flight that crashed in Reno in 1985, killing 68 people. His entire seat was launched out of the plane
  • Bahia Bakari, then 12, survived when a Yemenia Airways flight crashed near the Comoros in 2009, killing 152. She was found clinging to wreckage after floating in the ocean for 13 hours.
  • Jim Polehinke was the co-pilot and sole survivor of a 2006 Comair flight that crashed in Lexington, Kentucky, killing 49.
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Cricket World Cup League Two

Oman, UAE, Namibia

Al Amerat, Muscat

 

Results

Oman beat UAE by five wickets

UAE beat Namibia by eight runs

 

Fixtures

Wednesday January 8 –Oman v Namibia

Thursday January 9 – Oman v UAE

Saturday January 11 – UAE v Namibia

Sunday January 12 – Oman v Namibia

The candidates

Dr Ayham Ammora, scientist and business executive

Ali Azeem, business leader

Tony Booth, professor of education

Lord Browne, former BP chief executive

Dr Mohamed El-Erian, economist

Professor Wyn Evans, astrophysicist

Dr Mark Mann, scientist

Gina MIller, anti-Brexit campaigner

Lord Smith, former Cabinet minister

Sandi Toksvig, broadcaster

 

Rebel%20Moon%20%E2%80%93%20Part%20Two%3A%20The%20Scargiver%20review%20
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Ipaf in numbers

Established: 2008

Prize money:  $50,000 (Dh183,650) for winners and $10,000 for those on the shortlist.

Winning novels: 13

Shortlisted novels: 66

Longlisted novels: 111

Total number of novels submitted: 1,780

Novels translated internationally: 66

Votes

Total votes: 1.8 million

Ashraf Ghani: 923,592 votes

Abdullah Abdullah: 720,841 votes 

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While you're here
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North Pole stats

Distance covered: 160km

Temperature: -40°C

Weight of equipment: 45kg

Altitude (metres above sea level): 0

Terrain: Ice rock

South Pole stats

Distance covered: 130km

Temperature: -50°C

Weight of equipment: 50kg

Altitude (metres above sea level): 3,300

Terrain: Flat ice
 

T20 World Cup Qualifier

October 18 – November 2

Opening fixtures

Friday, October 18

ICC Academy: 10am, Scotland v Singapore, 2.10pm, Netherlands v Kenya

Zayed Cricket Stadium: 2.10pm, Hong Kong v Ireland, 7.30pm, Oman v UAE

UAE squad

Ahmed Raza (captain), Rohan Mustafa, Ashfaq Ahmed, Rameez Shahzad, Darius D’Silva, Mohammed Usman, Mohammed Boota, Zawar Farid, Ghulam Shabber, Junaid Siddique, Sultan Ahmed, Imran Haider, Waheed Ahmed, Chirag Suri, Zahoor Khan

Players out: Mohammed Naveed, Shaiman Anwar, Qadeer Ahmed

Players in: Junaid Siddique, Darius D’Silva, Waheed Ahmed

Best Foreign Language Film nominees

Capernaum (Lebanon)

Cold War (Poland)

Never Look Away (Germany)

Roma (Mexico)

Shoplifters (Japan)

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Name: Dr Hassan Mohsen Elhais

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ALL THE RESULTS

Bantamweight

Siyovush Gulmomdov (TJK) bt Rey Nacionales (PHI) by decision.

Lightweight

Alexandru Chitoran (ROU) bt Hussein Fakhir Abed (SYR) by submission.

Catch 74kg

Omar Hussein (JOR) bt Tohir Zhuraev (TJK) by decision.

Strawweight (Female)

Seo Ye-dam (KOR) bt Weronika Zygmunt (POL) by decision.

Featherweight

Kaan Ofli (TUR) bt Walid Laidi (ALG) by TKO.

Lightweight

Abdulla Al Bousheiri (KUW) bt Leandro Martins (BRA) by TKO.

Welterweight

Ahmad Labban (LEB) bt Sofiane Benchohra (ALG) by TKO.

Bantamweight

Jaures Dea (CAM) v Nawras Abzakh (JOR) no contest.

Lightweight

Mohammed Yahya (UAE) bt Glen Ranillo (PHI) by TKO round 1.

Lightweight

Alan Omer (GER) bt Aidan Aguilera (AUS) by TKO round 1.

Welterweight

Mounir Lazzez (TUN) bt Sasha Palatkinov (HKG) by TKO round 1.

Featherweight title bout

Romando Dy (PHI) v Lee Do-gyeom (KOR) by KO round 1.

Updated: January 30, 2024, 7:42 PM`